(1) Charles Taze Russell was not the founder of the Jehovah’s Witnesses. Russell did not believe in, and he preached against, the kind of authoritarian organization such Rutherford created after Russell died. Russell did begin printing his magazine, “Zion’s Watch Tower”, later “The Watch Tower”, in 1879. He was not the founder, however, of any religion.See:Russell Was Not the Founder of the Jehovah’s Witnesses

(2) Russell did not believe that Christ was to return in 1914; in 1876, Russell concluded that Christ had returned in 1874, and Russell died in 1916 still holding to the belief that Christ had returned in 1874. From 1904 onward, Russell was expecting the time of trouble to begin in 1914; he died in 1916 still holding to the belief that the time of trouble had begun in 1914. Russell was never expecting the JW kind of Armageddon in 1914, as he believed that Armageddon is a period of time in which the people of the nations are chastised, not eternally destroyed as Rutherford taught.

Precisely; the argument that Russell was a Freemason is indeed totally based on what is imagined (perceived) by those who are promoting such a ridiculus idea. There is in reality nothng at all factual ever presented that establishes Russell as having been a Freemason.

On the other hand, we do have tens of thousands of pages of Russell’s own works that ovewhelmingly testify that Russell did not believe in the goals of the Freemason, nor of any other such “secret organization” of men.

As far as the study of the Great Pyramid, the Edgar’s have presented an abundance of facts that demonstrate that the Great Pyramid is indeed God’s Witness in Egypt.http://binfo.rlbible.com/?page_id=276

Please note: due to changing of website hosting, many links may not be working. I am hoping to eventually get these corrected. Most of the material linked to may be found listed somewhere at:
<a href=”http://rlctr.blogspot.com/2016/10/all-on-this-site.html”>http://rlctr.blogspot.com/2016/10/all-on-this-site.html</a>